ADHD Meds: Why the “Limitless” Effect is Just an Illusion! ADHD Pills for Healthy People? The Placebo Effect is Stronger Than the Drug!
Many students and high-performers turn to ADHD medications like Adderall to boost their cognitive performance. But does it really do anything if you don’t actually have ADHD? A fascinating study from the University of Alabama shows: The effect is mostly in your head!
🔬 The Study (Cropsey et al., 2017): Researchers used a so-called “Balanced Placebo Design” with 32 healthy students (non-ADHD). The twist: There were four scenarios. Participants either received the real medication (Adderall) or a placebo, but were sometimes told the truth and sometimes lied to (“Here is your pill,” even though it was sugar, and vice versa).
🧠 The Tests: Participants had to complete a whole series of cognitive tests, including:
Memory: Remembering words (CVLT-II) and number sequences (Digit Span).
Attention: The “Connors Continuous Performance Task” (CPT) – staying focused over time and reacting to specific signals.
Verbal Fluency: Quickly finding words starting with specific letters (COWAT).
Executive Functions: Multitasking and planning (Trails A/B, Stroop Test).
📉 The Results:
No Super-Intelligence: The medication failed to improve performance in 29 out of 31 tests. There were only minimal improvements in very simple tasks (like remembering the first few words of a list).
The Power of Belief: Those who believed they had taken the medication (regardless of whether they actually did) showed better long-term memory and attention performance than those who thought they had taken a placebo.
Subjective Delusion: Those who believed they were “on drugs” rated their own performance much higher – regardless of their actual results.
Conclusion: For healthy people, these medications offer hardly any objective advantage for complex tasks. The “boost” many feel is often just the placebo effect – the mere expectation that you are now more powerful.
Research:
Buergler, S., Sezer, D., Bagge, N., Kirsch, I., Locher, C., Carvalho, C., & Gaab, J. (2023). Imaginary pills and open-label placebos can reduce test anxiety by means of placebo mechanisms. Scientific Reports, 13(1), 2624.
Cropsey, K. L., et al. (2017). “Mixed-amphetamine salts expectancies among college students: Is stimulant induced cognitive enhancement a placebo effect?” Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
Esposito, M., Cocimano, G., Ministrieri, F., Rosi, G. L., Di Nunno, N., Messina, G., … & Salerno, M. (2021). Smart drugs and neuroenhancement: what do we know?. Frontiers in Bioscience-Landmark, 26(8), 347-359.
Whitehurst, L. N., Morehouse, A., & Mednick, S. C. (2024). Can stimulants make you smarter, despite stealing your sleep?. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 28(8), 702-713.
Winkler, A., & Hermann, C. (2019). Placebo-and nocebo-effects in cognitive neuroenhancement: when expectation shapes perception. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10, 498.